05-01-2009, 20:47
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חבר מתאריך: 17.03.07
הודעות: 11,647
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BBC: Casualties rise in Gaza offensive
ה-BBC כהרגלו בקודש מנסה להיות מאוזן.
Casualties rise in Gaza offensive
Casualties have been pouring into over-stretched hospitals in the Gaza Strip as Israel presses on with its offensive against Palestinian militant groups.
The Palestinian health ministry said 90 people, mostly civilians and including 26 children, had been killed since Israeli forces went in on Saturday.
Israel says it is targeting militants continuing to fire rockets into Israel.
Intense diplomatic efforts are under way to resolve the crisis but Israel rejected calls for an immediate truce.
US President George W Bush gave his support to Israel's right to self-defence and blamed the current situation on Hamas militants.
"Instead of caring about the people of Gaza, Hamas decided to use Gaza to launch rockets to kill innocent Israelis," he said.
'Shattered bodies'
There were reports of fierce fighting in northern Gaza on Monday.
Dr Khamis al-Essi, an emergency doctor at Gaza's biggest hospital, al-Shifa, said they were struggling to cope with the huge numbers of casualties.
He said they had received "all sorts of casualties, from shattered bodies, beheaded individuals and patients with superficial cuts and lacerations".
"Most of the injuries affected civilians, especially women and children," he told the BBC.
Among the dead was a family of seven killed by an Israeli air strike in a refugee camp east of Gaza City, health officials said.
Dr Essi said many families were in need of ambulances, but medical workers were struggling to reach casualties because they were being shot at.
Israel insists it is not targeting civilians, and accuses Hamas of using civilians as human shields by operating in densely-populated areas.
Fighting was reported around Beit Hanoun and Jabaliya on Monday, and Gaza city itself - a little further south - was said to have been encircled.
The BBC's Hamada Abu Qammar in Gaza City said residents on the edges of the city were heading into the city centre seeking safe places away from the fighting.
The Israeli army said it hit 40 targets in the Gaza Strip on Monday, including several tunnels and the homes of a number of Hamas officials.
There were also reports that troops had also pounded mosques they believe are being used as weapons' stores and seized a main highway, effectively slicing the territory in two.
But information about what is happening is limited as Israel has barred foreign reporters from entering Gaza.
Palestinian medical sources say the number of people killed in Gaza now stands at more than 500, with some 2,500 wounded. These figures cannot be independently verified.
Five Israelis have been killed since the start of Israel's military operation 10 days ago.
Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak said Hamas had suffered a "hard blow", but insisted the offensive in Gaza would continue.
"We still haven't reached our objectives," Mr Barak told Israeli MPs.
A spokesman for Hamas' military wing, identified as Abu Obeida, said "thousands" of fighters were ready to battle Israeli troops inside Gaza.
And he said rocket attacks on Israel would continue.
The Israeli army said Palestinian militants fired 20 missiles into southern Israel on Monday.
Shuttle diplomacy
For the people of Gaza, living conditions are deteriorating sharply. Supplies of fuel, food, water, and wheat are said to be running desperately low.
A spokesman for Unrwa, the UN aid agency for the Palestinians, said food was urgently needed and people were facing "serious hunger", with supplies for just 48 hours.
"One million people are without electricity. Crucially the hospitals in Gaza are running on emergency generators. This in my book amounts to a humanitarian crisis," Christopher Gunness told the BBC.
Israel said it had allowed a convoy of 80 lorries carrying food and medicines through Gaza's southern frontier.
Away from the frontline, diplomatic efforts to halt the fighting in the Gaza Strip have been moving into high gear.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy was shuttling across the Middle East, taking in Egypt - which mediated a recent six-month truce between Hamas and Israel - as well as Jerusalem, the West Bank and Syria.
On Monday morning an EU delegation met Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh before heading to Israel for talks with Ms Livni.
"The EU insists on a cease-fire at the earliest possible moment," said Karel Schwarzenberg, the foreign minister of the Czech Republic, which took over the EU's presidency last week.
But Ms Livni appeared to rebuff the call, saying: "When Israel is being targeted, Israel is going to retaliate."
"Israel is going to give an answer to it because this is an ongoing, long battle, war, against terror."
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